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After He Chose Her Over Me, I Took Everything Back Novel Cover

After He Chose Her Over Me, I Took Everything Back

Chelsea dropped the file on my desk at five-forty on a Friday. "Portland. Monday morning meeting with Hawthorne Logistics. You're flying out tonight." I stared at the folder. Then at her. "Tonight is my anniversary." "Then I guess you'll have to celebrate when you get back." She was already turning away. Her heels clicked on the polished floor like a metronome. "Three days. Don't come back without the contract." I opened my mouth. Closed it.
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Chapter 1

Chelsea dropped the file on my desk at five-forty on a Friday.

"Portland. Monday morning meeting with Hawthorne Logistics. You're flying out tonight."

I stared at the folder. Then at her. "Tonight is my anniversary."

"Then I guess you'll have to celebrate when you get back." She was already turning away. Her heels clicked on the polished floor like a metronome. "Three days. Don't come back without the contract."

I opened my mouth. Closed it. The cubicle next to mine had gone very still. Marcus Webb didn't look up from his monitor, but I saw the muscle tighten in his jaw. He'd seen this script before. We all had.

I texted Dash from the cab to the airport. *I'm so sorry. Last-minute trip. I'll make it up to you when I'm back.*

His reply came twenty minutes later. *No worries, babe. Take care of yourself.*

Three dots. Then nothing.

The Portland hotel smelled like industrial carpet and stale coffee. I rehearsed my pitch in the bathroom mirror until my mouth felt rubbery. Four months I'd spent on Hawthorne. Four months of late calls, custom proposals, hand-delivered samples.

I walked into their office Monday at nine sharp.

The receptionist gave me a confused smile. "Oh. Ms. Lawrence. We thought you knew. Ms. Howard's team finalized everything Saturday. Lovely woman. Very thorough."

The air-conditioning hummed somewhere above me. I felt my fingers go cold inside my coat pockets.

"Saturday," I repeated.

"Yes. They flew in Friday night."

I thanked her. I don't remember walking out.

On the early flight home, I didn't cry. I watched the clouds break apart over the Cascades and tried to do the math on my own life. Four months of work. One weekend. One signature.

I landed at SeaTac before noon.

The apartment was quiet when I let myself in. Dash's gym bag was gone. Good. I needed a shower and a long, ugly nap before I had to be a person again.

I sat on the edge of the bed and pulled out my phone.

The security app opened on the second tap. Dash had insisted on the cameras six months ago. *For safety, babe. You travel a lot now.* I'd thought it was sweet.

I scrolled to Saturday night. Eleven-twelve p.m. Living room camera.

The front door opened. Dash walked in first. Then a woman.

Chelsea.

My thumb hovered. The clip kept playing without me. She laughed at something he said. He pulled her in by the waist like he'd done it a hundred times. Like the choreography was already memorized.

They moved out of frame, toward the bedroom.

I switched cameras.

I shouldn't have. I did.

The bedroom feed loaded. Our bed. The gray duvet I picked out at Crate and Barrel. The lamp on his side, on. Her hand on his chest. His mouth on her neck. No hesitation. No glance toward the door. No flicker of the man who used to text me good morning before I was awake.

I watched it once. My brain refused. It just wouldn't fit through the opening.

I watched it again.

The second time, something in my chest folded itself up small and went very, very quiet. Quieter than the apartment. Quieter than the inside of an empty church.

I didn't cry. I sat there with the phone in my lap until my screen went black, and then I sat there a little longer.

Then I locked the file. Saved a copy to my private cloud. Saved another to the encrypted drive Fallon had given me three Christmases ago as a joke. *For your eventual divorce, darling.* I'd laughed.

I didn't laugh now.

---

Three days later, Dash took me to a place on Pike Street with bistro chairs and a wine list one page long.

He ordered pasta he didn't eat. He pushed it around with his fork in tight little circles. I knew that gesture. He used to do it before midterms in college, when he was rehearsing something difficult.

"Brae." He set the fork down. "We need to talk."

"Okay."

He looked at me with the careful, practiced softness of a man who had decided how this would go. "I've been thinking. About us. About where I'm headed."

I took a sip of wine. "Where you're headed."

"My career. Long-term." He cleared his throat. Adjusted his collar. "You're amazing, Brae. You know that. But I need to be honest with myself. About what I need."

"What do you need."

He blinked. He hadn't expected the question to come back at him so flat.

"I need someone who can move me forward. Professionally."

"Say her name, Dash."

His jaw worked. The candle between us guttered.

"Chelsea." He said it quietly, like the name itself was a strategy. "Her uncle is Jerry Graham. Regional manager. He has promotion authority over the entire western corridor." He met my eyes. His were clear. Calm. Reasonable. "You can't give me what I need to get where I'm going. I think we both know that."

I set my wine down. The glass made a small sound against the table.

"I see."

"I'm not trying to hurt you. I want you to understand. This is just a career decision."

A career decision.

I stood up. I left the wine half full. I walked past the hostess and out onto Pike Street, and the cold salt air off the Sound hit me like a hand across the face.

I did not turn around.

---

The apartment still smelled like him. His cologne on the throw pillow. His hoodie over the kitchen chair. The tube of toothpaste he always squeezed from the middle.

I sat on the bathroom floor with my back against the tub and I cried until my ribs hurt. Not for him. For the girl who ate ramen with him in a studio apartment and believed every word. For the girl who hid her last name like it was something shameful. For the years.

I cried until I was empty.

Then I got up. Washed my face. Looked in the mirror.

The woman looking back at me did not look like someone who had just been left.

She looked like someone who had just been freed.

---

Monday morning I walked into the office at eight-fifty-eight. Same blazer. Same low ponytail. Same coffee, black.

Chelsea was already at her glass office, watching the floor through the open door. She wore red. Her ring catching the overhead light.

She smiled at me. A small, private smile.

I smiled back.

At nine-oh-three, the email landed. *Reassignment of accounts, effective immediately.* My entire client list. Stripped. Redistributed across her team.

At nine-eleven, a calendar invite. *Mandatory team strategy session. Tuesday, 2 p.m.*

I had a standing call with Nathan Cole at two on Tuesdays. Chelsea knew that. She had approved the recurring meeting herself.

At nine-fourteen, an email to HR was forwarded to me by accident, or maybe not by accident. *Re: Pattern of attendance concerns, B. Lawrence.*

I sat very still at my desk.

I straightened my cuffs.

Then I opened a new document, and I started typing.

Everything.

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